The Guardian (USA)

Satanic Temple condemns vandalism of its statue by Christian military veteran

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

The leader of an organizati­on whose satanic altar at Iowa’s state capitol was torn down by a Christian military veteran on Thursday has dismissed the vandalism as “a real act of cowardice”.

“There’s a certain point at which we need some adults in the room to tell people what … liberal, democratic values are; what their value is; why we uphold them; what they’re good for; and they need to stand up for these values or we are going to further degenerate in our polarism towards autocracy,” the co-founder of the Satanic Temple, Lucien Greaves, told CNN’s NewsNight on Thursday.

The Satanic Temple obtained permission from Iowa’s government to erect a statue of a goat-headed figure at the state capitol in Des Moines along with the group’s seven fundamenta­l tenets, which call on members “to act with compassion and empathy toward all” and declare people’s bodies as “inviolable”.

The statue and its associatio­n with the Satanic Temple ignited a fierce debate over the breadth of the US constituti­on’s first amendment, which provides Americans their core freedoms of speech and religion.

The Satanic Temple makes clear that its members do not actually worship the devil nor do they believe in either Satan’s existence or the supernatur­al. Instead Satan is used as a symbol of free will, humanism and antiauthor­itarianism.

Iowa’s governor, Kim Reynolds, issued a statement calling the Satanic Temple’s display “absolutely objectiona­ble” but suggested it was one “a free society” should allow to stand. Reynolds called on “all those of faith” to pray alongside her and recognize the traditiona­l display honoring Jesus’s birth also put up at the capitol.

Reynolds met intense criticism from conservati­ve circles who believed she should leverage her executive powers to remove the display. Conservati­ves staged prayer rallies and protests around the goat-headed statue, all of which are consistent with the first amendment.

Tensions boiled over on Thursday when authoritie­s said a Christian and military veteran tore the Satanic Temple statue’s head off before surrenderi­ng to law enforcemen­t to be booked with a count of criminal mischief. In a statement on Facebook, the Satanic Temple described the damage as being “beyond repair”.

“The world may tell Christians to submissive­ly accept the legitimiza­tion of Satan, but none of the founders [of the US] would have considered government sanction of satanic altars inside capitol buildings as protected by the first amendment,” Michael Cassidy told RepublicSe­ntinel.com, a conservati­ve news outlet, apparently without providing citations to support his assertion.

“I saw this blasphemou­s statue and was outraged,” said Cassidy, a former US navy pilot who has previously run for Congress unsuccessf­ully in Mississipp­i. “My conscience is held captive to the word of God, not to bureaucrat­ic decree. And so I acted.”

The founder of the conservati­ve group Turning Point USA, Charlie Kirk, hailed Cassidy as “Satan slayer” on Thursday. He also pledged $10,000 to Cassidy’s legal defense.

Greaves insinuated that Cassidy’s actions were little more than “cowardice dressed up as heroism” by an aspiring politician.

“It’s acting [as if] they’re standing up for us when … they’re really yielding to the whims of an uncomprehe­nding, undemocrat­ic mob,” Greaves said. “And they don’t have the spine to stand up for the values that they [would swear] to uphold” if they ever took an oath of elected office.

The controvers­y pitting the Satanic Temple against Cassidy occurred about a month before Iowa is scheduled to host the caucus that customaril­y kicks off presidenti­al election years.

 ?? Photograph: Charlie Neibergall/AP ?? The Iowa state capitol in Des Moines. The statue has ignited a fierce debate over the breadth of the first amendment.
Photograph: Charlie Neibergall/AP The Iowa state capitol in Des Moines. The statue has ignited a fierce debate over the breadth of the first amendment.

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